Early work In 1974, Reeve auditioned for the soap opera
Love of Life to pay tuition fees at Juilliard. Initially, he was promised a schedule that would not interfere with his studies. However, his character quickly gained popularity, leading to increased screen time. When Reeve reminded the producers of their agreement, they responded that it was not set in writing. The following year, Reeve had to leave Juilliard to fulfill his contract with
CBS. He received an honorary
Doctor of Fine Arts degree from Juilliard in 1997. In between filming for the soap opera, Reeve took acting classes at the
HB Studio and appeared in an
Off-off-Broadway production of
Berchtesgaden at the
Theater for the New City. The play was directed by
Barbara Loden, who became Reeve's mentor. She coached him not to play "on the nose", and he often followed that advice over the years. After that, he starred in a limited run of
Berkeley Square at the
Manhattan Theatre Club. In late 1975, Reeve auditioned for the
Broadway play
A Matter of Gravity.
Katharine Hepburn watched his audition and cast him as her character's grandson. With Hepburn's influence over CBS, Reeve worked out the schedules of the soap opera and the play so he would be able to do both. Because of his busy schedule, Reeve ate candy bars and drank coffee in place of meals and experienced exhaustion and
malnutrition. At one of the performances, he entered the stage, said his first line, and then promptly fainted. Hepburn turned to the audience and said, "This boy's a goddamn fool. He doesn't eat enough red meat." The
understudy finished the play for Reeve, and a doctor treated him. The doctor advised Reeve to eat a healthier diet. He stayed with the play for nine months and was given favorable reviews. Reeve and Hepburn became very close. Some gossip columns rumored a romance between the two. Reeve said, "She was 67 and I was 22, but I thought that was quite an honor. ... I believe I was fairly close to what a child or grandchild might have been to her." Hepburn told him, "You're going to be a big star, Christopher, and support me in my old age." He replied, "I can't wait long." Reeve said that his father, who was a professor of literature and came to many of the performances, was the man who most captivated Hepburn. When the play moved to Los Angeles in June 1976, Reeve—to Hepburn's disappointment—dropped out. They stayed in touch for years after the play's run. Reeve later regretted not staying closer and just sending messages back and forth. Reeve's first role in a Hollywood film was a small part as a junior officer in the 1978 naval submarine disaster movie
Gray Lady Down, starring
Charlton Heston. He then acted in the play
My Life at the
Circle Repertory Company with friend
William Hurt.
Superman films During the
Off-Broadway production of
My Life, Stark Hesseltine told Reeve he had been asked to audition for the leading role as
Clark Kent/
Superman in the big-budget film
Superman (1978).
Lynn Stalmaster, the casting director, put Reeve's picture and résumé on the top of the pile three separate times, only to have the producers throw it out each time. Through Stalmaster's persistent pleading, a meeting between director
Richard Donner, producer
Ilya Salkind, and Reeve was arranged. The morning after the meeting, Reeve was sent a 300-page script. He was thrilled that the script took the subject matter seriously, and that Donner's motto was
verisimilitude. Hesseltine also told him that
Marlon Brando was going to play
Jor-El and
Gene Hackman was going to play
Lex Luthor. Reeve flew to London for a
screen test, but he still did not believe he had much of a chance. On the plane ride, he imagined his approach to the role. He later said, "By the late 1970s, the masculine image had changed. ... Now it was acceptable for a man to show gentleness and vulnerability. ... I felt that the new Superman ought to reflect that contemporary male image." He based his portrayal of Clark Kent on
Cary Grant's role in the 1938 film
Bringing Up Baby. After the screen test, his driver said, "I'm not supposed to tell you this, but you've got the part." Portraying Superman would be a stretch for the 24-year-old actor. He was tall, but his physique was slim. Reeve went through an intense two-month training regimen with former British weightlifting champion
David Prowse supervising. The training regimen consisted of running in the morning, followed by two hours of
weightlifting and 90 minutes on the
trampoline. He added of muscle to his "thin" frame. He later made even higher gains for
Superman III (1983), though for
Superman IV: The Quest for Peace (1987), he decided it would be healthier to focus more on
cardiovascular workouts. One of the reasons Reeve could not work out as much for
Superman IV was an emergency
appendectomy that he had in June 1986. Reeve was never a Superman or comic book fan, though he had watched
Adventures of Superman starring
George Reeves. Reeve found the role offered a suitable challenge because it was a dual role. He said, "there must be some difference stylistically between Clark and Superman. Otherwise, you just have a pair of glasses standing in for a character." Remembering Loden's earlier advice, Reeve also decided to "underplay" Superman: "I was six feet four, strong, and physically imposing; so I played against that, making him as casual as possible, letting the audience sense an implied power." On the commentary track for the director's edition of
Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut, creative consultant
Tom Mankiewicz spoke of how Reeve had talked to him about playing Superman and then playing Clark Kent. Mankiewicz then corrected Reeve, telling him he was "always,
always playing Superman" and when he was Clark Kent, he was "playing Superman who was playing Clark Kent." Mankiewicz described it to Reeve as a role within a role. The film, made without the use of computers for special effects, was the first attempt to realistically show a person flying. Roy Field, the film's optical supervisor, said, "There were many techniques used to make Superman fly, but the best special effect of all was Christopher Reeve himself. We discovered very early on he, being a
glider pilot, could hold his body aerodynamically. So when he got into the harness, the whole shot began to come alive." The film grossed $300.2 million worldwide (unadjusted for inflation). Reeve received positive reviews for his performance: • "Christopher Reeve's entire performance is a delight. Ridiculously good-looking, with a face as sharp and strong as an ax blade, his bumbling, fumbling Clark Kent and omnipotent Superman are simply two styles of gallantry and innocence." –
Newsweek • "Christopher Reeve has become an instant international star on the basis of his first major movie role, of Clark Kent/Superman. Film reviewers—regardless of their opinion of the film—have been almost unanimous in their praise of Reeve's dual portrayal. He is utterly convincing as he switches back and forth between personae." –
Starlog For his performance, Reeve won a
BAFTA Award for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles. He described Superman as "the closest opportunity I've had to playing a classical role on film, the closest expression to something of mythical dimension." His co-star
Margot Kidder said after his death that, with the
Superman films, Reeve "knew he'd done something meaningful. He was very aware of that and very happy with that role." Much of
Superman II was filmed at the same time as the first film. In fact, the original plan had been for the film to be a single three-hour epic comprising both parts. After most of the footage had been shot, the producers had a disagreement with Donner over various matters, including money and special effects, and Donner was fired. Director
Richard Lester, who had worked with the producers previously on the two-parter
The Three Musketeers (1973) and
The Four Musketeers (1974), replaced Donner. Lester had the script changed and re-shot some footage. The cast was unhappy, but Reeve later said he liked Lester and considered
Superman II to be his favorite of the series. Donner's version of
Superman II, titled
Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut, was released on
DVD in November 2006 and was dedicated in memory of Reeve. Lester directed
Superman III, released in 1983, solo. Reeve believed the producers
Alexander Salkind, his son Ilya Salkind, and
Pierre Spengler had decreased the credibility of
Superman III by turning it into a
Richard Pryor comedy rather than a proper Superman film. Reeve missed Donner and believed
Superman III only really good element was the automobile
junkyard scene in which Evil Superman fights Good Clark Kent in an internal battle. Reeve's portrayal of the Evil Superman was highly praised, though the film was critically panned.
Superman IV: The Quest for Peace was released in 1987. After
Superman III, Reeve vowed that he was done with Superman. However, he agreed to continue the role in a fourth film on the condition he would have partial creative control over the script. The
nuclear disarmament plot was his idea.
Cannon Films purchased the production rights to the character of Superman from the Salkinds in the mid-1980s. Cannon Films were known for low-budget, poorly acted, poorly scripted action films. They cut the budget of
Superman IV in half to $17 million. The film was both a critical failure and a
box-office disappointment, becoming the lowest-grossing
Superman film to date. Reeve later said, "the less said about
Superman IV the better." Both of Reeve's children from his relationship with Gae Exton had uncredited appearances in a deleted scene in which Superman rescues a girl, played by his daughter Alexandra, and reunites her with her brother, played by his son Matthew, after Nuclear Man creates a tornado in
Smallville. Reeve would have made a fifth
Superman film after the rights to the character reverted to the Salkinds and Spengler if the film had a budget of the same size as
Superman: The Movie. Although there was potential for such a film in the late 1980s after Cannon Films went bankrupt, Reeve never received a script. In 1993, two years before Reeve's accident, the Salkinds sold the rights to the character of Superman again, this time to
Warner Bros. "There was supposed to be a fifth
Superman movie titled
Superman Reborn, but because of studio shifts, the terrible box office [
Superman IV] got, and ... Reeves's accident, it never saw the light of day."
1980s Reeve's first role after 1978's
Superman was in the 1980 time-travel mystery/romantic fantasy
Somewhere in Time. Reeve as playwright Richard Collier romanced Elise McKenna, a popular stage actress from the early 20th century, played by
Jane Seymour. The film was shot on
Mackinac Island using the
Grand Hotel in mid-1979, and was Reeve's favorite film to shoot. The original plan was for a limited release and to build word of mouth, but early test screenings were favorable and the studio decided on a wide release, which proved to be the wrong strategy. Early reviews savaged the film as unduly sentimental and melodramatic, and an
actors' strike prevented Reeve and Seymour from doing publicity. The film quickly closed, although
Jean-Pierre Dorléac was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Costume Design in 1980. However, thanks to screenings on cable networks and
video rentals, the film became a
cult classic. INSITE (International Network of Somewhere in Time Enthusiasts) did fundraising to sponsor a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame for Reeve in 1997, and raised over $20,000 for the
Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation. Seymour became a friend of Reeve, and in 1995, named one of her twin sons Kristopher in his honor (Reeve also became his godfather). The Grand Hotel and Mackinac Island has become a popular tourist site for film fans. In that same year, Reeve made a guest appearance on
The Muppet Show, where he performed "
East of the Sun (and West of the Moon)" on a piano for
Miss Piggy, who had a crush on him. Reeve denied being Superman but displayed the character's superpowers throughout the episode. He then returned to continue filming on the not yet finished production of
Superman II. After finishing
Superman II, Reeve called
Nikos Psacharopoulos, the artistic director of the
Williamstown Theatre Festival, whom he knew since his apprentice days, and asked if he could join the company. Reeve did two plays that season:
The Front Page and
The Cherry Orchard. The former, directed by
Robert Allan Ackerman, became one of the biggest successes of the summer. From then on, he was a regular at the festival. Later in the year, Reeve played a disabled Vietnam veteran in
Lanford Wilson's play
Fifth of July on Broadway to excellent reviews. To prepare for the role, he was coached by an amputee on how to walk on artificial legs. The production was nominated for five
Tony Awards, including
Best Play. In 1981, Reeve returned to Williamstown to play
Achilles in the two-part, six-hour production of
The Greeks. In 1982, Reeve stretched his acting range further and played a devious novice playwright with questionable motives regarding his idol and mentor
Michael Caine, in
Sidney Lumet's suspenseful dark comedy
Deathtrap, based on the play by
Ira Levin. The film was well received, but a major plot twist was spoiled by the press, affecting its box office performance. The same year, Reeve portrayed corrupt Catholic priest John Flaherty making challenging decisions during
World War II in
Frank Perry's
Monsignor. Reeve felt this gave him the opportunity to play "a morally ambiguous character who was neither clearly good nor clearly bad, someone to whom life is much more complex than the characters I've played previously." Reeve blamed the failure of the film on poor editing. He said, "the movie is sort of a series of outrageous incidents that you find hard to believe. Since they don't have a focus, and since they aren't justified and explained, they become laughable." and
Ronald Reagan at a reception and picnic marking the 15th anniversary of the
Special Olympics program in the Diplomatic Reception room, May 1983 In 1983, Reeve appeared in ''
Shelley Duvall's Faerie Tale Theatre, playing the dual roles of Prince Charming and the cowardly prince in Sleeping Beauty. In Williamstown, he acted in the play Holiday. Later that year, Reeve went to Kranjska Gora, Slovenia, to work on the film The Aviator''. The producers approached him without knowing he could fly a
Stearman, the vintage biplane used in the film. He readily accepted the role and volunteered to do his own piloting to achieve a more realistic look. The film was released in March 1985. Reeve was then offered the role of Basil Ransom in 1984's
The Bostonians alongside
Vanessa Redgrave. Though Reeve ordinarily commanded over one million dollars per film,
Ismail Merchant could only afford to pay him one-tenth of that. Reeve had no complaints, as this was exactly the kind of film he wanted to do. In a 2005 interview,
James Ivory said that
Merchant Ivory Productions did not have good representatives at the time, so Reeve "brokered" the arrangements with the
CAA to get them into the agency. The film exceeded expectations and performed well at the box office for what was considered to be an
art house film.
The New York Times ranked it "among the finest film adaptations of a classic novel that anyone has yet made." Ivory thought that Reeve was "wonderful" in
The Bostonians, but that he was "really undervalued by the critics and even the awards" because "they were so used to thinking of him as Superman." Hepburn called Reeve to tell him he was "absolutely marvelous" and "captivating" in the film. When he told her he was currently shooting the 1985 version of
Anna Karenina, she said, "Oh, that's a terrible mistake." Reeve reunited with Redgrave in the play
The Aspern Papers during its 1984 run in
London's West End. In Williamstown, he played the title role in
Richard Cory. In March 1985, Reeve starred as Count Vronsky in the television film
Anna Karenina, opposite
Jacqueline Bisset. Reeve's daughter, Alexandra, also appeared in the film as his character's 10-month-old daughter, taking her first steps. It was for this film that Reeve learned to ride horses and decided to take up the sport seriously upon returning home. In April, Reeve hosted an episode of
Saturday Night Live. He then returned to the stage, playing Tony in
The Royal Family in Williamstown and the Count in a modern adaptation of
The Marriage of Figaro on Broadway. Reeve also hosted the television documentary
Dinosaur!, which was filmed at the
American Museum of Natural History. It was one of the earliest prime-time specials on prehistoric life and won the
Emmy Award for
Outstanding Special Visual Effects. Also in 1985,
DC Comics named Reeve as one of the honorees in the company's 50th-anniversary publication,
Fifty Who Made DC Great, for his work on the
Superman film series. In 1986, Reeve was still struggling to find scripts he liked. A script named
Street Smart had been lying in his house for years, and after re-reading it, he took it to Cannon Films. They agreed to produce it on the condition that he play Superman in at least one more sequel for them. Reeve starred opposite
Morgan Freeman, who was nominated for his first Academy Award for the film. It received excellent reviews but performed poorly at the box office, possibly because Cannon Films had failed to properly advertise it. Back in Williamstown, Reeve began building a house and starred in
Summer and Smoke alongside
Laila Robins. After the filming of
Superman IV in February 1987, Reeve and Exton separated and Reeve returned to New York. In a depression over his personal life, he thought doing a comedy might be good for him and agreed to appear in
Switching Channels. However,
Burt Reynolds and
Kathleen Turner had a feud during filming, which made the time even more unbearable for Reeve. He later stated that he made a fool of himself in the film and most of his time was spent refereeing between Reynolds and Turner. In her 2008 memoir, Turner wrote, "Burt and I were sworn enemies. ... It was not happy shooting at all. I was absolutely miserable. If the crew hadn't been so kind, and Chris Reeve, who was so very nice, hadn't been there in the cast, it might have been impossible." The film did poorly, and Reeve believed it marked the end of his movie star career. In June, he appeared in the British television special charity event
The Grand Knockout Tournament and then went to Williamstown to rehearse for the play
The Rover. On June 30, Reeve met his future wife
Dana Morosini. In November, he did a
stage reading of Joel Gross' new play
Mesmer on Broadway. In 1988, Reeve played Major
Johnnie Dodge in the two-part television film
The Great Escape II: The Untold Story. Like the
1963 film, the first part tells the story of the mass escape of Allied POWs from a German camp in 1944. The second part depicts the search and prosecution of those responsible for the
murder of 50 escapees, which was not covered in the 1963 film. However, for most of 1988 and 1989, Reeve worked onstage. He starred in another production of
Summer and Smoke, this time with
Christine Lahti, at the
Ahmanson Theatre. In Williamstown, he reunited with
Madeleine Potter in
Mesmer. In 1989, Reeve played Polixenes in an Off-Broadway production of ''
The Winter's Tale. In Williamstown, he played the lead in John Brown's Body'', in which Dana also had a small role. Reeve was part of a rotating cast in
John Tillinger's production of
Love Letters at the Promenade Theatre; with
Julie Hagerty, he also performed in San Francisco, Los Angeles and Boston in 1989 and 1990. Reeve auditioned for the
Richard Gere role in
Pretty Woman but walked out on the audition because they had a half-hearted casting director fill in for
Julia Roberts.
1990s In 1990, Reeve starred in the American Civil War film
The Rose and the Jackal, in which he played
Allan Pinkerton, the head of
President Lincoln's new Secret Service. In Williamstown, he played Death/Prince Nikolai Sirki in the play
Death Takes a Holiday. In the early 1990s, Reeve was cast as a villain in three television films almost in a row:
Bump in the Night (1991),
Death Dreams (1991), and
Nightmare in the Daylight (1992). The most notable of these was
Bump in the Night, in which Reeve played a child molester who abducts a young boy. The movie received fair to positive reviews. Reeve felt it was important for parents of young children to see the film. In 1992, Reeve played one of the leads in
Peter Bogdanovich's comedy
Noises Off. In a 2020 book
Picturing Peter Bogdanovich: My Conversations with the New Hollywood Director, Bogdanovich said, "[Reeve] was very good in that. He was good at comedy. I could tell that from the first
Superman. He was my only choice for that part." In another television film,
Mortal Sins, Reeve for the second time played a Catholic priest, this time hearing the confessions of a serial murderer in a role reminiscent of
Montgomery Clift in
Alfred Hitchcock's
I Confess. He also acted in the short film
Last Ferry Home. Reeve's last performance in a proper stage production was
The Guardsman in Williamstown that year. In the spring of 1992, Reeve attended the US premiere of
Howards End where he met Ivory again. The next day, Ivory called him and offered him a role in his new film,
The Remains of the Day (1993). The script was one of the best he had read, and he unhesitatingly took the part. The film was deemed an instant classic and was nominated for eight Academy Awards. At the 2024 screening of the film, Ivory praised Reeve's performance, saying, "He was a great guy... a very, very good actor who got trapped in Superman." According to Reeve's son Will,
The Remains of the Day is the film that his father was most proud of. In 1993, Reeve starred opposite
Charles Bronson in the television film
The Sea Wolf, based on
Jack London's novel of the
same name. After that, he traveled to Canada to shoot a miniseries,
Black Fox, co-starring
Tony Todd. CBS released it as three films two months after Reeve's accident in 1995. Scenes of Reeve riding are featured heavily in the story. Reeve's children, Matthew and Alexandra, appear briefly in the background in the first film. During this period, Superman's grip on Reeve's career gradually began to loosen. In a review for
Morning Glory (1993), one critic wrote: "Those who can't take Reeve seriously unless he's wearing a blue suit and a red cape will find themselves pleasantly surprised by the heft and subtlety he brings to his [role]. … This movie isn't big enough to make Reeve a star again. But the impression he makes here is good enough to suggest that a reversal of perception—and fortune—won't be long in coming." Another critic said in a review for
Speechless (1994): "Mr. Reeve has quietly evolved into a versatile character actor… It's only a matter of time before he is 'officially' rediscovered and celebrated, like John Travolta in
Pulp Fiction." These became his last performances onstage. The following year, Reeve starred in
John Carpenter's
Village of the Damned, a remake of the 1960 British movie of the same name. Both films were based on the 1957 novel
The Midwich Cuckoos by
John Wyndham. For Carpenter, the film was a contractual obligation, but "it has a very good performance from Christopher Reeve, so there's some value in it."
Village of the Damned was Reeve's final feature film to be released in theaters. Shortly before his accident, Reeve played a paralyzed police officer in the
HBO movie
Above Suspicion. He did research at a
rehabilitation hospital in
Van Nuys "on what it would be like to be a paraplegic." Reeve's injury occurred less than a week after the premiere of the film. Reeve also made several guest appearances in television shows:
Carol & Company in 1991,
Road to Avonlea and
Tales from the Crypt in 1992. He accepted an offer to appear in
Road to Avonlea without reading the script because
Colleen Dewhurst, with whom he was close, spoke highly of the show. Reeve's episode in
Tales from the Crypt,
"What's Cookin'", is considered one of the best in the series. He was also one of the celebrity guest callers on
Frasier in 1993. Before his injury, Reeve was offered the lead in the 1995 film
Kidnapped. He also planned to direct his first film for the big screen, a romantic comedy entitled
Tell Me True. Both plans were cancelled as a result of the horse-riding accident that left him paralyzed. In 1996, Reeve narrated the HBO documentary
Without Pity: A Film About Abilities. The film won the Emmy Award for
Outstanding Informational Special. He then acted in a small role in the film
A Step Toward Tomorrow. The following year, Reeve made his directorial debut with the HBO film
In the Gloaming with
Robert Sean Leonard,
Glenn Close,
Whoopi Goldberg,
Bridget Fonda, and
David Strathairn. The film was nominated for five Emmy Awards, including
Outstanding Directing for a Miniseries or Special, and won four awards out of the six it was nominated for at the
CableACE Awards. Dana said, "There's such a difference in his outlook, his health, his overall sense of well-being when he's working at what he loves, which is creative work." In early 1998, Reeve persuaded
Michael Eisner, the CEO of
Disney at the time, to give a two-hour prime-time slot on
ABC to a spinal cord research fundraiser. The special focused on inspiring stories of people with disabilities, as well as performances by disabled artists. Reeve said, "To put two hours about spinal cord injury on prime-time TV is unheard of. We wanted to make it a celebration of life. Show the triumphs that can happen." Numerous celebrities lent their support, including
Robin Williams,
Tom Hanks,
Meryl Streep, Glenn Close,
Stevie Wonder,
Willie Nelson,
Gloria Estefan, and many others.
A Celebration of Hope received an Emmy nomination for
Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Special. On April 25, 1998,
Random House published Reeve's autobiography,
Still Me. The book spent 11 weeks on the
New York Times Best Seller list. Reeve narrated the abridged audiobook, which won him the
Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album, the
Audie Award for Solo Narration by the Author, and the Earphones Award from
AudioFile. The paperback edition with a new afterword was released the following year and spent an additional two weeks on the Best Seller list. Also in 1998, Reeve starred in and served as executive producer of
Rear Window, a remake of Hitchcock's
1954 film. He was nominated for a
Golden Globe and won a
Screen Actors Guild Award for his performance.
2000s In 2000, Reeve made guest appearances on the
PBS series
Sesame Street. In September 2002, Random House published his second book,
Nothing Is Impossible: Reflections on a New Life. This book is shorter than
Still Me and focuses on Reeve's world views and the life experiences which helped shape them. The book spent three weeks on the
New York Times Best Seller list. Reeve narrated an unabridged audiobook for which he received his second Grammy nomination for Best Spoken Word Album. In 2001, Reeve's son Matthew began filming a three-part series detailing Reeve's recovery process and advocacy for spinal cord injury research. The first film,
Hope in Motion, aired on ABC in September 2002 under the title
Courageous Steps. It received an Emmy nomination for
Outstanding Nonfiction Special. In February 2003, it was broadcast on
BBC One under its original title. Following Reeve's death in 2004, a third film was never made, while
Hope in Motion and its follow-up,
Choosing Hope, were released on DVD in 2007. In 2003, Reeve guest-starred in an episode of
The Practice. He submitted a story treatment to the show's creator,
David E. Kelley, that addresses the issues of health insurance policy and
caregiver burnout. Kelley liked the idea and wrote an episode based on it. Reeve's final acting role was in the television series
Smallville portraying
Dr. Virgil Swann. On February 25, 2003, he made an appearance in the episode "
Rosetta", in which Dr. Swann informs Clark Kent (
Tom Welling) about his origins. The scenes of Reeve and Welling feature music cues from 1978's
Superman, composed by
John Williams and arranged by
Mark Snow. At the end of the episode, Reeve and Welling appeared in a short spot inviting people to support the Christopher Reeve Paralysis Foundation. "Rosetta" set ratings history for
The WB. The
fan community met the episode with rave reviews and praised it as being among the series' best to this day. Reeve also appeared in the episode "
Legacy", in which he reunited with fellow stage actor
John Glover, who played
Lionel Luthor in the show. In 2004, Reeve directed the
A&E film
The Brooke Ellison Story. The film is based on the true story of
Brooke Ellison, the first
quadriplegic to graduate from
Harvard University. Reeve during this time was directing the animated film ''
Everyone's Hero''. It was one of his dream projects and he died during the middle of production for the film. Reeve's wife Dana helped out, and his son Will was a cast member in the film. Dana and Will also had small roles in
The Brooke Ellison Story.
Roles turned down by Reeve Following the first
Superman movie, Reeve realized Hollywood producers wanted him to be an action star. He later said, "I found most of the scripts of the genre poorly constructed, and I felt the starring roles could easily be played by anyone with a strong physique." Reeve also did not feel he was right for the other films he was offered and turned down the lead roles in
American Gigolo,
The World According to Garp,
Splash,
Fatal Attraction,
Romancing the Stone,
Lethal Weapon, and
Body Heat. Hepburn recommended Reeve to
David Lean for the role of
Fletcher Christian in
The Bounty, starring
Anthony Hopkins. After considering it, Reeve decided that he would be miscast, and the film was eventually made with
Mel Gibson. In the 1990s, Reeve received scripts for
Picket Fences and
Chicago Hope and was asked by CBS if he wanted to start his own television series. This would have meant moving to Los Angeles, which Reeve did not want to do. He declined the offers. After his accident, Reeve was offered the role of
Mason Verger in
Ridley Scott's
Hannibal. He turned it down upon learning that the character was a paralyzed and facially disfigured child molester. The role went to
Gary Oldman. ==Personal life==